Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao (L) and his Pakistani counterpart Yousuf Raza Gilani attend the Pakistan-China Business Cooperation Summit in Islamabad on December 18, 2010. – AP

ISLAMABAD: Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao vowed Sunday to boost strategic cooperation with Pakistan as he wrapped up a three-day visit to Islamabad that concluded deals worth around 35 billion dollars.

“It is our collective objective to strengthen strategic ties between our two countries,” he told a joint session of Pakistan's parliament before leaving to return to China Sunday afternoon.

Boosting trade and investment with Pakistan was the focus of the first visit by a Chinese premier in five years to the country.

Business leaders and cabinet ministers formalised around 35 billion dollars' worth of trade deals during the visit, signing a raft of agreements designed to prop up Pakistan's ailing economy and ease its crippling energy crisis.

Wen, who arrived in Pakistan straight from a visit to arch-rival India, Sunday predicted “sustained growth of our economic and trade ties” as the 60th anniversary of diplomatic relations between Beijing and Islamabad approached.

He welcomed Pakistani efforts to increase exports to China and said the two countries would explore the possibility of a currency swap agreement.

“The future of economic cooperation between the two countries is very bright,” Wen said. “China is Pakistan's all-weather strategic partner.”

Pakistan regards China as its closest ally and the deals as incredibly important to a moribund economy, which was dealt a massive blow by catastrophic flooding this year and suffers from sluggish Western investment.

Wen pledged Sunday that "China will remain steadfast in its support to Pakistan and will expect the same from the international community."

“The people of Pakistan will surely overcome (their) difficulties,” he added.

Though not specifically mentioned, behind-the-scenes talks had been expected on China building a one-gigawatt nuclear power plant as part of Pakistani plans to produce 8,000 megawatts of electricity by 2025 to make up its energy shortfall.

“Pakistan has rendered invaluable sacrifices in the war against terror,” Wen said, urging the international community to respect Islamabad's efforts.

“We should not link terrorism to any specific religion or nation, and avoid pursuing double standards while dealing with the issue. We should rather focus on the root causes of terrorism and ways to eliminate them,” he added.

Wen inaugurated a 35-million-dollar cultural centre built as a monument to Pakistani-Chinese friendship and held talks with opposition leader Nawaz Sharif and senior figures in the military, which depends on China for hardware.

But local analysts recognise that China's support comes at a price - a price that could increase as Beijing edges closer to superpower status.

“China will expect Pakistan to be more forthright in counter-terrorism,” said political analyst Hasan Askari.

“It has worries about militancy in western China”, where it wants to develop Kashgar city into a major industrial and economic centre, he added.

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